“It will be interesting to do and interesting to see what the fans make of the reworked songs. As for the nuts and bolts of the show? I don’t want to give too much away!

“All I can say is that it will definitely be different to what people have come to expect from a full Terrorvision set.

“I don’t want it to be too much about Terrorvision but of course that will be the predominant flavour. It’ll be a big old mish mash of stuff.”

Twenty years ago Terrorvision opened for hometown favourites Def Leppard at a sell-out show at Sheffield’s Don Valley Stadium.

It offered four mates from Bradford a golden opportunity to showcase their best material. Three years later the quartet claimed a first top five single and by 1999 the band enjoyed a number two smash with Tequila.

“It was brilliant but playing in front of anyone always is,” added Wright. “It was purely coincidental that we got that gig because I think Joe Elliott (Def Leppard frontman) heard us on the Friday Rock Show and liked our single.

“He told a lot of folk how much he liked us. The Don Valley show was a bit of a drunken haze if I’m honest – or maybe it was the sun that got to me? It was very hot.”

Terrorvision shared a bill with fellow Brit upstarts Thunder that day when a new breed of bands, including The Almighty, the Quireboys, Gun, Little Angels and more, were blazing a trail for homegrown talent.

“I think we actually rolled against that scene and a lot of what was going on back then,” added Wright. “We came along to do something a little bit different. I was proud of the fact that we were a band from Bradford and I didn’t have to sing with a fake LA accent.

“Without naming names I’d heard the Small Faces before and I’d heard Bad Company before. Maybe being a bit different to those bands was what helped us stand out from the crowd.”